the Minimal Supersymmetric Standard Model
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1 UCRHEP-T196 Fermilab Pub-97/262-T July 1997 Lower Bound on the Pseudoscalar Mass in arxiv:hep-ph/ v2 8 Aug 1997 the Minimal Supersymmetric Standard Model E. Keith 1, Ernest Ma 1, and D. P. Roy 2,3 1 Department of Physics, University of California Riverside, California 92521, USA 2 Tata Institute of Fundamental Research, Mumbai , India 3 Fermi National Accelerator Laboratory, Batavia, Illinois 60510, USA Abstract In the Higgs sector of the Minimal Supersymmetric Standard Model, the mass of the pseudoscalar A is an independent parameter together with tanβ v 2 /v 1. If m A is small, then the process e + e h + A is kinematically allowed and is suppressed only if tanβ is small. On the other hand, the mass of the charged Higgs boson is now near M W, and the decay t b+h + is enhanced if tanβ is small. Since the former has not been observed, and the branching fraction of t b+w cannot be too small (by comparing the experimentally derived t t cross section from the leptonic channels with the theoretical prediction), we can infer a phenomenological lower bound on m A of at least 60 GeV for all values of tanβ.
2 The most studied extension of the standard SU(2) U(1) electroweak gauge model is that of supersymmetry with the smallest necessary particle content. In this Minimal Supersymmetric Standard Model (MSSM), there are two scalar doublets Φ 1 = (φ + 1,φ 0 1 ) and Φ 2 = (φ + 2,φ 0 2), with Yukawa interactions (u,d) L d R Φ 1 and (u,d) L u R Φ2, respectively, where Φ 2 = iσ 2 Φ 2 = (φ 0 2, φ 2). The Higgs sector of the MSSM has been studied in great detail[1] and it is a current topic of intensive experimental and theoretical scrutiny.[2] There are five physical Higgs bosons in the MSSM: two neutral scalars (h and H), one neutral pseudoscalar (A), andtwo chargedones(h ± ). Their masses andcouplingstootherparticlesarecompletely determineduptotwounknownparameterswhichareoftentakentobem A andtanβ v 2 /v 1, where v i is the vacuum expectation value of φ 0 i. In the following, we will show that m A > 60 GeV for all values of tanβ. Our conclusion is based on a combination of theoretical and experimental inputs from a number of different observations which have become available recently. In the MSSM, the pseudoscalar Higgs boson A and the charged Higgs bosons h ± are given by analogous expressions, namely A = 2(sinβImφ 0 1 cosβimφ 0 2), (1) h ± = sinβφ ± 1 cosβφ ± 2. (2) At tree level, their masses are related by m 2 h = m 2 ± A + M2 W. The mass-squared matrix spanning the two neutral scalar Higgs bosons 2Reφ 0 1,2 is given by M 2 = m2 A sin2 β +MZ 2 cos2 β (m 2 A +M2 Z )sinβcosβ (m 2 A +MZ)sinβcosβ 2 m 2 Acos 2 β +MZ 2 sin 2 β +ǫ/sin 2 β. (3) In the above, ǫ is the leading radiative correction[6] due to the t quark: ǫ = 3g2 2m 4 t 8π 2 M 2 W ln ( 1+ m2 m 2 t where m is the mass parameter for the supersymmetric scalar quarks. 2 ), (4)
3 Let us take m A = 0 and rotate M 2 to the basis spanned by h 1 = 2(sinβReφ 0 1 cosβreφ 0 2), h 2 = 2(cosβReφ 0 1 +sinβreφ 0 2). (5) We get[3] M 2 = M 2 Z sin 2 2β +ǫcot 2 β M 2 Z sin2βcos2β +ǫcotβ M 2 Z sin2βcos2β +ǫcotβ M2 Z cos2 2β +ǫ. (6) It is well-known that in this basis, the h 1 ZZ and h 2 AZ couplings are absent, hence the nonobservation ofe + e h+adoesnot rule out any valueof m A if tanβ is small enough[4]. In this limit, the eigenstates of M 2 are essentially h 1 and h 2. If h h 1, then it is too heavy to be produced. If h h 2, then its coupling to A is too small to have a measurable branching fraction. Note that ǫ M 2 Z, i.e. (91 GeV) 2, for m t = 175 GeV and m = 1 TeV. From the nonobservation of e + e h + Z where the Z boson may be either real or virtual and the nonobservation of e + e h+a, where h is an arbitrary linear combination of h 1 and h 2, it is possible to obtain the MSSM exclusion region in the m A tanβ plane. One such detailed analysis[5] using only LEP1 data collected at the Z resonance shows that m A has to be greater than about M Z /2 for tanβ > 1. With the higher energies available at LEP2 since then, this bound is expected to be at least 60 GeV. Toobtainalower boundonm A fortanβ < 1, weproposetousethemssmrelationship[6] m 2 h ± = m2 A +M2 W ǫ MW 2 4sin 2, (7) β m 2 t where the last term is the leading radiative correction for tanβ < 1. We then derive bounds on m A from the bounds on m h ± by considering t decay. Taking m t = 175 GeV, we see that t b+h + is allowed for values of m h ± up to 170 GeV, corresponding to m A up to about 150 GeV. The nonobservation of the above process would then translate into lower bounds on m A as a function of tanβ. 3
4 In the MSSM, the charged-higgs-boson couplings to the quarks and leptons are given by H int = g 2 h + [cotβ m ui ū i d il +tanβ m di ū i d ir +tanβ m li ν i l ir ]+h.c., (8) 2MW where the subscript i represents the generation index, and we have used the diagonal KM matrix approximation[7]. The leading-logarithm QCD (quantum chromodynamics) correction is taken into account by substituting the quark mass parameters by their running masses evaluated at the h ± mass scale. The resulting decay widths are Γ(t bh + ) = g2 2λ 1/2 (1,m 2 b/m 2 t,m 2 h + /m 2 t) 64πM 2 Wm t [(m 2 t cot2 β+m 2 b tan2 β)(m 2 t +m2 b m2 h +) 4m2 t m2 b ], where λ denotes the usual Kallen function and λ 1/2 is equal to the magnitude of the momentum of either decay product divided by m t /2, and Γ(h + τ + ν) = g2 2m h + m 2 32πMW 2 τ tan2 β, (10) Γ(h + c s) = 3g2 2 m h + (m 2 32πMW 2 c cot2 β +m 2 s tan2 β). (11) Assuming that the only other competing channel is the standard-model decay t bw +, the t bh + branching fraction is then where B = (9) Γ(t bh + ) Γ(t bh + )+Γ(t bw + ), (12) Γ(t bw + ) = g2 2 λ1/2 (1,m 2 b /m2 t,m2 W /m2 t ) [M 64πMWm 2 W 2 (m2 t +m2 b )+(m2 t m2 b )2 2MW 4 ]. (13) t It is clear from Eq. (9) that B has a minimum at tanβ = (m t /m b ) 1/2 6, but it becomes large for tanβ < 1 and tanβ > m t /m b. Thus we expect to see a sizeable t bh + signal in these two regions if m h + < m t. We see from Eqs. (10) and (11) that τ + ν is the dominant decay mode of h + if tanβ >> 1. Thus an excess of t t events in the τ channel compared to the standard-model prediction 4
5 constitutes a viable h ± signal in the large tanβ region. A recent analysis[8] of the CDF t t data in the τl channel (l = e,µ) has led to a mass bound of m h ± > 100 GeV for tanβ > 40. A similar bound has also been obtained from the same t t data in the inclusive τ channel[9]. The above method is not applicable in the small tanβ region, where h + is expected to decaymainlyintoc s, i.e. twojets. Ontheotherhand, wecanusetheso-calleddisappearance method to look for the presence of t bh + decay in boththe small and large tanβ regions[7] as described below. The key observation is that h ± couples negligibly to the light fermions, particularly e and µ, whereas the W boson couples to them with full strength universally. Since the e and µ decay modes play an important role in the detection of t t events at the Tevatron, the experimentally derived t t cross section is sensitive to the branching fraction B of Eq. (12). After all, if t decays into bh +, there would not be any energetic e or µ in the final state, as would be possible with the W boson. The experimental t t cross sections obtained by the CDF and D0 collaborations[10, 11] are weighted averages of their measured cross sections in the (I) dilepton (ll) and (II) lepton plus multijet (lj) channels, using the standard formula They are summarized below. σ = Σ(σ i/δ 2 i ) Σ(1/δ 2 i). (14) CDF : σ ll = pb, σ lj = pb σ CDF = pb. (15) D0 : σ ll = 6.3±3.3 pb, σ lj = 5.1±1.9 pb σ D0 = 5.5±1.8 pb. (16) The σ lj of CDF is a weighted average of the measured cross sections using the SVX and SLT b-tagging methods; that of D0 is a weighted average of those using kinematic cuts and SLT b-tagging. In both cases, the weight of the SLT method is rather low. From Eqs. (15) and (16), we see that for both CDF and D0, δ lj δ ll /2, hence σ σ ll +4σ lj. (17) 5 5
6 Furthermore, since the CDF and D0 cross sections have essentially identical errors, we can take a simple average of the two: σ CDF+D0 = pb. (18) Herewe have combined thetwo errorsusing δ 2 = δ 2 1 +δ 2 2, since they are largely statistical. Wenotethatthedileptonchannel(I)correspondstotheleptonic(e,µ)decayofboththet and t quarks, whereas the lepton plus multijet channel (II) corresponds to the leptonic decay of one, say t bl + ν, and the hadronic decay of the other. For the standard-model decay t bw +, the respective branching fractions are 2/9 and 2/3, whereas for the postulated decay t bh +, they are 0 and a function which rises rapidly to 1 for tanβ < 1. Thus the relative contributions of different final states to the two channels are WW : Wh ± : h ± h = 1 : 0 : 0 for (ll) and 1 : 3/4 : 0 for (lj). [We have used the maximum value of 3/4 corresponding to very small tanβ. This is a conservative approach, because any smaller value will give us a better bound on m h ± as explained below.] We have then a suppression factor relative to the standard model of f ll = (1 B) (for B = 0.3), (19) f lj = (1 B) 2 +2B(1 B)(3/4) 0.8 (for B = 0.3). (20) Since the relative weights of the (ll) and (lj) channels are 1:4, Eqs. (19) and (20) correspond to an effective suppression factor of f = 0.74 (for B = 0.3). (21) We note that for large tanβ, h ± decays mainly into τ, hence it would be hard for the Wh ± final state to pass the n jet 3 cut required for the (lj) channel. This implies an extra suppression factor of about 1/3 for the Wh ± contribution, hence f is about 0.7 already for B = 0.2, i.e. our bound is conservative because it assumes B =
7 Finally the theoretical estimates of the t t cross section including higher-order QCD corrections are 4.13 to 5.48 pb[12], and 5.10 to 5.59 pb[13]. These ranges are not identical, but the two estimates are in reasonable agreement as to their upper bounds. We shall thus assume for our purpose that σ(t t) 5.6 pb. (22) Combining this with the suppression factor of Eq. (21), we obtain an upper bound of σ 4.1 pb (23) for the weighted cross section of Eq. (17). This is 2σ lower than the combined CDF and D0 estimate of Eq. (18), as well as the CDF estimate of Eq. (15). Hence we can take B = 0.3 as a 2σ upper bound for the branching fraction of t bh + decay. In Figure 1 we plot the exclusion regions of m h ± as a function of tanβ using B = 0.3. We also show the exclusion region obtained in Ref. [8], which used the appearance method of looking for τ, instead of the disappearance method of not finding e or µ discussed here. To convert aboundonm h ± tooneonm A, weusethefull expression including allone-loop radiative corrections[6] in place of Eq. (7) which is approximate and valid only for tanβ < 1. In Figure 2 we plot the exclusion regions of m A as a function of tanβ deduced from t decay and t t production corresponding to Fig. 1. We note that the radiative correction is negative for small tanβ which increases the m A bound, and is positive for large tanβ which decreases it. We note also that at extreme values of tanβ, near 0.2 and 100, the Yukawa couplings involved are becoming too large for a perturbative calculation to be reliable. We then add a line at m A = 60 GeV for tanβ > 1 as a conservative upper limit from the combined LEP data[5, 14]. Our conclusion is simple: in the Minimal Supersymmetric Standard Model, combining what we know from LEP and the Tevatron and using a conservative estimate of the theoretical t t cross section, the pseudoscalar mass m A is now known to be greater than 60 GeV for all values of tanβ. 7
8 Note Added: After the completion of our paper, we found out that the ALEPH Collaboration has just recently obtained[15] the bound m A > 62.5 GeV for tanβ > 1. ACKNOWLEDGEMENT One of us (DPR) thanks N. K. Mondal of the D0 Collaboration for discussions. This work was supported in part by the U. S. Department of Energy under Grant No. DE-FG03-94ER References [1] SeeforexampleJ.F.Gunion, H.E.Haber, G.Kane, ands.dawson, The Higgs Hunters Guide (Addison-Wesley, Reading, MA, 1990). [2] For a recent review, see for example H. E. Haber, hep-ph/ [3] See for example T. V. Duong, E. Keith, E. Ma, and H. Kikuchi, Phys. Rev. D52, 5045 (1995). [4] See for example E. Ma and D. Ng, Phys. Rev. D49, 6164 (1994). [5] J. Rosiek and A. Sopczak, Phys. Lett. B341, 419 (1995). [6] For a review of radiative corrections, see for example H. E. Haber, R. Hempfling, and A. H. Hoang, hep-ph/ [7] See for example R. M. Godbole and D. P. Roy, Phys. Rev. D43, 3640 (1991); M. Drees and D. P. Roy, Phys. Lett. B269, 155 (1991). 8
9 [8] M. Guchait and D. P. Roy, Phys. Rev. D55, 7263 (1997). [9] CDF Collaboration: F. Abe et al., Phys. Rev. Lett. 79, 357 (1997). [10] CDF Collaboration: D. W. Gerdes, hep-ex/ , Report No. Fermilab-Conf E, to appear in Proc. of XXXII Rencontres de Moriond on Electroweak Interactions and Unified Theories, Les Arcs, France, March [11] D0 Collaboration: S. Abachi et al., hep-ex/ , Report No. Fermilab-Pub E (submitted to Phys. Rev. Lett.) [12] S. Catani et al., Phys. Lett. B378, 329 (1996). [13] E. Berger and H. Contopanagos, Phys. Rev. D54, 3085 (1996). [14] A detailed updated analysis (A. Sopczak, private communications) shows that the m A bound is actually much higher than 60 GeV. [15] The ALEPH Collaboration, R. Barate et al., Report No. CERN-PPE/ (June 1997). 9
10 Figure Captions Fig. 1. Exclusion regions at 95% confidence level in the m h ± tanβ plane using B = 0.3 (solid lines) for t bh + as explained in the text. The dashed line corresponds to the method used in Ref. [8]. Fig. 2. Exclusion regions at 95% confidence level in the m A tanβ plane. Regions I and III correspond to those depicted in Fig. 1 with m h ± converted to m A taking into account the MSSM one-loop radiative corrections. Region II represents a conservative estimate of the expected limit from LEP1 and LEP2 for tanβ > 1 (dotted line). A slightly higher value of 62.5 GeV for tanβ > 1 has just recently been obtained by the ALEPH Collaboration[15]. 10
11 m h [GeV] Fig tanß m A [GeV] I II III Fig tanß 11
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